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What to do now in your garden - week 36

By Gardeners' World on 22/12/2010 15:03:57

into decorative containers Put up bug boxes to provide places for beneficial insects Around the gardenPlant daffodil bulbs in pots and bordersCheck roses for suckers and cut off any you findTrim conifer hedgesFlowersKeep picking summer-sown saladsPlant garlic


What to do now in your garden - week 45

By Gardeners' World on 31/10/2011 11:15:10

Make a bird houseA nesting box is a great way of attracting birds into your garden in the spring and summer. It not only gives you the pleasure of watching them but also gives the birds a home close to plenty of garden insects to feast upon. Well


Birds and butterflies

By Richard Jones on 20/07/2007 10:57:49

must be the swift snatching up a flying insect. The last few evenings have been very good for insects bumping up against the lighted windows of the kitchen. Monday saw a female stag beetle, upturned, legs in the air, as she bumped into the wall


More spiders

By Richard Jones on 03/10/2007 10:57:49

insects. Dysdera is well-equipped though, with large jaws that articulate up and down as well as left and right. It can open its mandibles, twist them round and skewer the carapace of its prey from above and below at the same time. And if it can't get a


No fly zone

By Richard Jones on 31/10/2007 09:16:49

and lays her pale beige marshmallow-shaped eggs (I estimated about 250), and that's it. Job done.Like most insects, her adult life is very short and with only one aim: to start off the next generation. This was only the second female I've ever seen


Feather-footed bee

By Richard Jones on 09/04/2008 11:57:00

There's something buzzing round the grape hyacinths. It's a fat, furry brown bee and it's being very animated. I love these insects and get a real buzz myself seeing them each year, because they're one of the true heralds of spring. Anthophora


In praise of woodlice

By Richard Jones on 26/11/2008 13:02:26

, a painful irony given they are nearly the only terrestrial crustaceans alive today, and that in the normal course of events they need cool damp places, otherwise their rather inefficient cuticle lets them dry out too quickly. Unlike insects which


RSPB Homes for Wildlife

By Richard Jones on 10/12/2008 12:12:12

. Not surprisingly for an RSPB initiative, most people (over 99%) wanted to improve their gardens for birds, but I was really very pleased to see that over 95% wanted to improve them for insects too.One of this month's tips (leave a fallen tree where it is or move


The birch sawfly

By Richard Jones on 01/07/2009 14:47:08

' thoracic legs near the head, and lacks the fat gripping prolegs and claspers towards the tail end, which moth and butterfly caterpillars use to grip the leaf.Despite textbook assurances that the insect is quite common and widespread, this is only the first


An orgy of ants

By Richard Jones on 12/08/2009 10:27:22

first thought were dark lines of silt washed along the high water mark were actually strand lines of dead insects. I listed over 100 species, including many beetles, but the vast majority were the winged male and female black ants. I tried to do a rough


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